Chapter 19. GIF Format
GIF (Graphic Interchange Format) was
the first graphic file type to be displayed by early web browsers,
and it remains the most popular and versatile format for distributing
color images on the Web to this day. Any image can be saved as a GIF,
but they excel at condensing graphical images with areas of flat
color.
GIFs are completely platform-independent, meaning a GIF created on
any platform can be viewed and edited on any other platform. They
were originally developed by CompuServe to distribute images over
their network to a variety of platforms (this is why you sometimes
see GIFs referred to as "CompuServe GIF").
It is also the only graphic file format that is universally supported
by all graphical browsers, regardless of version. If you want to be
absolutely sure everyone will see your graphic, make it a GIF.
19.1. GIF87a Versus GIF89a
There are technically two types of GIF
file: GIF87a and the newer, improved GIF89a. Both are fully supported
on most browsers, and both use .gif as their
file name suffix.
GIF87a is the original format for indexed color images. It uses LZW
compression and has the option of being interlaced.
GIF89a is the same, but also includes
transparency and animation capabilities
(animation is discussed in Chapter 23, "Animated GIFs"). If you want
to add these features to your graphic, you'll need to create
the graphic with a tool that supports the GIF89a format. These
features have become so popular with web developers that this format
has become thede facto standard on the Web
today. Detailed descriptions of each feature appear in the following
sections of this chapter.
 |  |  | | III. Graphics |  | 19.2. 8-Bit Indexed Color |
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